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No, mosquitoes will never transmit AIDS (hehe, it seems a bit absolute) Mosquito infection requires the pathogen to survive, grow and reproduce in the mosquito body. Like JE, viruses multiply in mosquitoes in the thousands, and when they bite you, a large amount of virus is injected into your body, so that you can get infected. HIV does not survive in mosquitoes, so AIDS is never transmitted through mosquitoes.
Even if the mosquito keeps biting, there is no fear of AIDS on the tip of the mouth, because the mosquito bite must spit out an enzyme, and the ** can only be inhaled after the **, these enzymes have a killing effect on the virus.
All in all, mosquitoes never transmit AIDS! Don't be afraid of that.
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HIV is neither developed nor multiplied in mosquitoes.
colony, so it is impossible to spread it biologically. And the mechanical mode of transmission is in mosquitoes.
Nor is it feasible. This is because mosquitoes spit saliva through their salivary ducts (as a lubricant for them) before sucking blood.
Sucking blood), and then blood is drawn through the esophagus, and the blood is inhaled in one direction and is not spit out again after inhalation. Other.
In addition, the residual blood on the mosquito's mouth is only a milliliter, and it takes 2,800 repeated bites before it can be drawn.
HIV infection. Moreover, even if the mosquito inhales the blood with the HIV virus, the AIDS virus is in 2
Within 3 days, it can be digested and destroyed by mosquitoes and completely disappear. According to the physiological characteristics of mosquitoes, once the mosquito is full.
After the blood, it will not sting the person again until it is completely digested.
At present, there are no reports of HIV infection from mosquito or insect bites worldwide.
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No, if it would be on Earth, so everyone would have it.
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It's okay. It's as if the virus is dead the moment it reaches the body of the text.
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Mosquitoes can transmit a variety of diseases such as malaria, filariasis, Japanese encephalitis, etc.
But mosquito bites cannot transmit AIDS.
HIV can only live in human blood and body fluids. HIV leaves the human body and dies easily. With the exception of primates such as orangutans that can be infected with HIV, no other animals and insects can be infected with HIV, and here is the most scientific and easy-to-understand explanation:
First, mosquito-borne diseases can be transmitted in two broad ways: biological and mechanical. The pathogens of malaria, dengue fever, Japanese encephalitis and other diseases go through the stages of development and multiplication in the mosquito body, and then when the mosquito bites a person, the saliva containing the pathogen is injected into the human body to infect the person, which is a biological transmission.
However, when HIV-laden blood is inhaled by mosquitoes, HIV cannot develop and multiply, so HIV can only be transmitted mechanically. However, scientists isolated HIV from the mosquito's stomach and found that after the mosquito sucked the blood of AIDS patients, HIV can survive in the mosquito's stomach for 2-3 days, and once the mosquito sucks full of blood, it will not bite the person again until it is completely digested after 3-4 years, so the mechanical transmission route cannot be completed.
Second, there are concerns that residual blood from mosquitoes' mouths may carry HIV and can be transmitted to humans. However, the study found that the amount of residual blood on the mosquito's mouth was only milliliters, and if this was calculated, it would take 2,800 repeated bites of the same person to carry enough virus to cause HIV infection.
Third, some people ask why the long mouthparts of mosquitoes and hypodermic syringes are the same reason, why can syringes transmit HIV, but mosquitoes cannot? This is because the mosquito's esophagus is not the same tube as the saliva duct. It spits saliva from one tube and sucks in blood from the other.
The inhalation of blood is one-way and no longer spit out through the esophagus, which is different from the syringe. Therefore, when a mosquito bites and sucks blood, it will not vomit back the blood (its food) that has already been sucked into the stomach of the person who has been bitten.
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Theoretically possible.
But conditions are required.
The mosquito must carry the virus and bite 28 times in a row in the same person.
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No, mosquitoes don't spread, and if they could, AIDS would have spread long ago!
1. Mosquito bites blood goes in, not out!
Second, if you are worried about the blood on the mosquito's mouth, it is too little, and it will not survive when exposed to air!
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No, mosquito bites do not transmit HIV, and the amount of fluid exchanged is very small.
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There are only three known ways of transmission of AIDS, sexual, blood-borne and mother-to-child transmission, and there is no fourth way yet discovered, so it is impossible to get AIDS from a mosquito bite.
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AIDS is transmitted through sexual contact, blood, and vertical transmission from mother to child. It needs to be in line with the transmission route of HIV patients to have a chance of being infected with HIV.
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No, unless a mosquito bites you immediately after the AIDS patient, which is too unlikely to happen.
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If you are bitten by a mosquito, you will not get AIDS, because the blood of AIDS will change after entering the mosquito's body, and you will not transmit the disease if you bite someone else's body.
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No, there is no such way of transmission of AIDS, there are only three ways of transmission: sex, blood, and mother and child.
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This possibility should be non-existent, and it has already been reported in the news.
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Health Wellness Mosquito Blood Virus, Can Mosquitoes Transmit AIDS? Come and see to find out the truth and pay attention to these questions.
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